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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1958)
o O MAIL TRIBUNE, Medfod, Oregon, Sunday, July 13, 1958 Tito's Errors Said Still Uncorrected Berlin (UPI) Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev said Friday that the Cominform denounciation of Yugoslavia in 1948 was correct and that President Tito still had not corrected the errors which led to his expulsion from the Communist organization. In an address to the East German Communist Party congress Khrushchev accused Tito of leading a slanderous campaign against the Soviet Union and the Soviet bloc. He said Yugoslavia had sold out socialism the So viet term for Communism for American "alms" and that Yugoslavia received $100 mil lion from the United States for reviving its slanderous at tacks on Russia. "The Americans do not give out money for nothing," Khrushchev said. "You have to sell your soul to get it." He said Yugoslavia is "shame fully concealing the fact that it has received other Ameri can alms." DIE'S THE YOU'VE BEEN ASKING ? 4b Use Tribune Want Ads Try and Stop Me 12 Mi 1 -''ixtJl tjf' 7 . :f I If if ft SfNv. i ' I , MS ll it ' 1 Is. 1 1 i f4 7'Pfi J ' y If 1 1 P N i 1 1 i If 111 4 Mi'vm?, . ; NEW BOX CAR A newly designed box car to carry wood chips is shown un loading at a fibreboard plant. Southern Pa- cific has placed 500 of the new cars in op eration. They are used in Oregon and Cal ifornia. SP purchased the cars for S6 mil lion, officials said. SP Develop Cars To Transport Chips jfortianct wood cnips, a by-product of western forests, has resulted in construction of a new type box car being used by Southern Pacific rail road. The car resembles a roofless, .doorless box car. The steel D.J 1 ,i;V,H ini.rJ of SJ.1H njr uiwaiu t the top, and hauls wood chips from Oregon and California mills to manufacturers along the Southern Pacific. Southern Pacific com- nanv. designer of th new cars, has placed 500 of. them in service built for the rail road by Gerral American Transportation cor poration, at a cost of $6 million. Become Important "Wood chips have become a commercially important product only in recent years," E. C. Ordway, Southern Pac ific's freight traffic manager, Portland, said, "For decades the waste wood from which they're made was fed jnto scrap burners alongside saw mills. Today they're going in to such products as hard board, chipboard, paper and fiberboard. "Last year, we moved more than 35.000 carloads of chips from mills to factories," Ord way added. "That's well over three times the amount moyed five years earlier." One measure of the new product's importance looms up at Lobert, near Klamath Falls, where a SI 2 million plant has been built to con vert large stands of lodgepole pine, scrawny tree with no previous commercial value, into chips and in turn will become insulation build in board. Shipping Problems But if wood chips are a new-found asset, they also pose shipping problems. Be cause of their light weight and low original value, they must be moved in large quantities to be commercial ly attractive. And, when tran sported in conventional cars, they have a disturbing habit of clinging to the car walls, refusing to be unloaded. Southern Pacific's new cars, designed by C. C. Le riche. assistant engineer of car design and construction, were made especially to com bat these problems. Each of them carries almost 5.000 cubic feet of wood- chips, dumping them through bot tom doors into pits at their destinations. If the chips should cling to the sloping walls, a small portable vi brator is attached to the car, and the cargo is shaken loose. Well Pleased "SP's customers have shown themselves well pleased by the performance of the new cars," Ordway said. "By cutting the cost of moving wood chips, and of unloading them, the new cars liSlia -rrlAn ftlAw. n f . . a 4 f u P,,J "'cm a iai iiiuic Miy-iieui desirable product commercial rhantpr rpnnrrpd that retire--. ... Nurserymen fo Help In Portland Garden At a 3$cent board meeting of the Oregon Association of Nurserymen the members vot ed to participate in the Inter national Garden of Tomorrow by furnishing plant materials and assistance, according to an association official. J. Vernon Marshall, secre- sentatives from all seven chapters of the organization met in Roseburg July 8. At the meeting, he said, the group decided to work on the garden planned for the 1959 Oregon centennial exposition in Portland. Plans for the garden in clude construction of the big gest floral clock in the world. position, the flowers are scheduled to be transplanted in Washing park. . Marshall also announced ihat the Cascade chapter will jiold a picnic meeting July 15 beginning at 11 a.m. in the Grants Pass city park. iy, - ne saia. "in doing so, thy've made a substantial con tribution to the lumber eco nomy of Oregon and northern California." Increase Noted In Firm's Assets Assets of the Jackson Coun ty Federal Savings and Loan association increased $1,161, 554.38 during the six-month period ending June 30, ac cording to W. J. Warner, president. . He said the increase was due to an increase of $807, 690.42 in savings for the same period, which is the largest increase in the history of the association. Although the first mortgage loans increased only $297, 033.89 for the last six months, good earnings along with low operational costs made it pos sible to declare a ZVz per cent per annum dividend plus an extra one-half per cent per annum dividend for the six month period ending June 30, he said. Association investors re ceived a total of more than $217,000 in dividends June 30, he noted. Secretary John Pletsch said that although a total increase in total mortgage loans for the period was bout $175,000 less than same ' period last year, loans increased more during June, this year, than during June last year. -By BENNETT CERF- AFEW NOTABLE REMARKS collected by Hal Stebbins: Sidney' Tremayne: "Letters that should never have been I written and ought to be immediately destroyed are the only I ones worth keeping. George Bernard Shaw: ! "England and America are ' two countries separated by ' the same language." Oscar Wilde: "The differ- ence between literature and journalism is that journal ism is unreadable and liter-, ature is unread." On his own, Stebbins adds: "A chip on the shoul der indicates there is wood higher up" and "A good t listener is usually thinking , about something else." 'An uptown draft board still is wondering what to do with this letter: "We beg you to exempt our employe Joe Sneagle. He is the only man left in our plant, and at the moment is carrying on with. 14 inexperienced girls." ; 1 1958. by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate.'1 jf jrf- vVlt-pf 3&" - . Music Camp Concert Scheduled Tonight Ashland The , Siskiyou Music camp of Southern Ore gon college will present the first of a series of three con certs in the Lithia Park But ler Band shell at 7:30 o'clock tonight. It will be conducted by Glenn T. Matthews, founder of the music camp. Clarence Sawhill, a noted band authority and director of bands at UCLA, is conduc tor of the camp band and consultant - instructor for the college seminar on band methods and materials. WANT A BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN? It's as simple as this: a Paint Brush and a Can of GLIDDEN SPRED SATIN . . . and you, too, can have a lovely kitchen! Come in and choose from hundreds of Luscious Decorator Colors and paint your kitchen NOW! S&H Green Stamps! - FRAKE & SMITH Artists Supplies Custom Picture Framing 315 EAST MAIN PHONE SP 2-4564 Court Records DISTRICT COIRT Roland J. Allen, no operator's license, S10. Earl R. Stephenson, overload, $89. Shorald W. Chapman, failure to stop, S10. Terry L. Tull, violation basic rule. S15. Manuel A. Flores, violation basic rule. SI 5. William F. Madden, violation basic rule. S15. Cermal Cook. overheight.-SlO. Willard D. Rollins, failure to stop. S10. Earl L. Hess, defective gnal light, se. Dale L. Pratt, overweight. S6. Raymond D. MiUer, failure to dim lights, S7.50. Richard E. Wallace, failure to stop. S10 Q Russell D. Shoemaker, failure to stop. S10. Lenora Brand. Yreka. Calif., driv ing while under the influence of Intoxicating liquor. S255. Ralph Simpson Burgess, Camp White, driving while under the in fluence of intoxicating liquor, S235 and ten days in county jail. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATION Neil Raymond Cornwell, Spo kane. Wash., and Celeste Sylvia Winkelman, 164 Wightman st., Ash land. Robert Lewis Hill, 924 Grant st.. and Etta Beatrice Croxton, 303 North Fir St., Medford. The Suwannee River, which has its source in the Okefeno kee Swamp of South Georgia, has been made famous by two well-known songs: "Old Folks at Home," by Stephen Foster and ,:Swanee," by George Gershwin. O Sawdust iedferd Fuel Go. Tel. SP 2-2111 Court & McAnd. I - ' I - Mi ' 1 M. N. "Mel" Hogan I H I J. P. "Jim" Rowan FOSTER AND MARSHALL Members of the New York Stock Exchange ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF THEIR NEW OFFICE at 44 SOUTH CENTRAL Corner of 8th and Central Medford, Oregon Telephone SPring 3-7377 MONDAY, JULY 14tli The public is cordially invited to inspect this new, up-to-date brokerage office. CO-MANAGERS ARE M. N. HOGAN AND J. P. ROWAN O FORMERLY HOGAN-ROWAN & CO. jlj ' Ibrhiei ssisl MEDFORD SUIT SALI Rich woolen fabrics from our regular stocks in current styles and colors. A wide selection of sizes and materials. REGULAR TO 50.00 all REGULAR TO 60.00 Vf I fc REGULAR TO 69.50..... r........ ... n Q R SPORT COATS in luxurious silk-wool blends, all wool Shetlands, many tweeds and stripes. Also from our regular stock in famous brands. REGULAR TO 29.95 ... REGULAR TO 37.50 ; 52i MWi- film ,.oi ll' ! OPEN MONDAY DVQNING 'TIL 9:Ca o o o O